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GPS For the Light Infantry Leader

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... the USAF; fully operational in 1995. 28 satellites (incl. ... 4 spares), orbiting 22,200 km up. Satellites sent microwave signals with very precise time signals; ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: GPS For the Light Infantry Leader


1
Land Navigation
  • GPS For the Light Infantry Leader

2
What is GPS
  • A navigational system to determine location and
    velocity on land, at sea and in aircraft over the
    Earth
  • A system your receiver is just one part of it
  • Installed and operated by the USAF fully
    operational in 1995
  • 28 satellites (incl. 4 spares), orbiting 22,200
    km up
  • Satellites sent microwave signals with very
    precise time signals synchronization of several
    of these signals with the GPS units clock and
    triangulation gives a location on the surface of
    the Earth
  • You can only see a few at a time due to the shape
    of the Earth at least 4 are required for a good
    location fix

3
What GPS is good for
  • Indicates location on (or above) the Earth
  • Tells time very precisely and accurately
  • Indicates speed, direction, altitude
  • Does most of this with great precision
  • Reasonable accuracy location as good as a few
    feet with most modern hand-held units
  • All units have some added features
  • Waypoints
  • Routes
  • Tracks
  • Dynamic heading/distance
  • Moving map display

4
What GPS is not
  • A compass the north arrow is (generally) only
    relative to the track when moving
  • Always accurate or available certain conditions
    can degrade accuracy or cause total loss of
    signal, including
  • Being indoors, or under any structure
  • Terrain, including trees, mountains and ravines,
    buildings
  • Space weather (e.g. solar flares)
  • Sandstorms (due to static electricity)
  • Geometric Dilution of Position sometimes, your
    satellites will be in bad positions, and accuracy
    will drop for several hours, by as much as a
    factor of 10
  • Active jamming (loss of signal) or spoofing
    (showing false positions) by adversaries
  • Also note that Selective Availability (S/A)
    allows the DoD to degrade performance of
    commercial units in wartime
  • Some units do have built in real-time compasses,
    but these have their own limitations, and vary by
    device. GPS itself does not have a live compass,
    so understand the north arrow only counts when
    moving, and relative to the track
  • If GPS precision is important for a mission,
    have the USAF Space Command contact for your
    theater run the GIANT program to tell you the
    best times.

5
Pitfalls Precision vs. Accuracy
  • Precision vs. Accuracy A precise rifle groups
    well an accurate one hits the target. While both
    is best, accuracy is paramount.
  • The GPS, like most electronic devices, implies
    great accuracy due to its display of data very
    precisely.
  • Recognize the possibility and keep it in mind
    most modern GPS units will display an accuracy
    value. Use this, the number of satellites tracked
    and other behaviors to help determine how
    accurate the unit is reading at that moment.

6
Pitfalls Tool in the Toolbox
  • GPS is a supplemental navigational tool, not a
    crutch
  • Use GPS in conjunction with
  • Compass
  • Distance (pace or odometers)
  • Terrain association
  • Common sense
  • GPS will let you down if you have poor landnav
    skills, or are getting poor results with other
    methods

7
Using your GPS

8
Setup
  • Carry extra batteries know how to change them in
    the dark
  • Read the manual some of these setup functions
    are complex or counter-intuitive
  • Find a place to put it on your gear (should allow
    the antenna to see the sky best if it can do
    this all the time to speed its use, track your
    travel, etc.)
  • Configure it to not beep, and be secure
  • Set the grid to MGRS UTM will do, but avoid
    lat/long in degrees
  • Set Datum. WGS84 is a good default, but look at
    your maps every time. You may have to change it
    in the field, so memorize how to
  • Enable WAAS (EGNOS in Europe and MSAS in Japan
    are the same thing) for increased accuracy

The Garmin Rhino is a reasonably popular series
of handheld units that combines GMRS radio with a
GPS unit. It also can transmit position
information to other Rhinos in the area. This
should, of course, be disabled in any tactical
situation to avoid enemy interception. While
all ground units, and much air support, refer to
ground locations using MGRS, the USAF in general
uses Lat/Long. If you can set a secondary grid,
go ahead and have it set to Lat/Long, in DDMMSS.S
format, just in case. Know how to change it in
the field as well.
9
Pre-mission
  • Mapping GPS units, especially, will benefit from
    use of software on desktop computers. With this,
    you may more easily load information into the
    unit.
  • Plug the GPS into the PC, and load mission plan
    information into the unit.
  • Load maps for the area if you have a mapping GPS
  • Load waypoints and expected routes remember to
    use maps and be flexible, a few good points and
    routes are better than many cluttering up the
    display
  • Review the GPS maps and compare to your issue
    printed maps, other information issued or which
    you have from previous observation. Digital maps
    have flaws and are often out of date Note the
    discrepancies so you are prepared for
    contingencies when you get on the ground
  • Keep OPSEC in mind just like a printed map, use
    codenames for objectives. Do not store waypoints
    for rear areas, and other items not required for
    the mission

10
Using in the field
  • Use GPS units in conjunction with compasses,
    distance measuring and terrain association
  • Know what you want to get from the GPS unit
    before pulling it out do not stare at the screen
    while walking, or just hope it will tell you the
    answer
  • Refer to the GPS unit for current coordinates,
    distance and bearing to waypoints, and to observe
    your recorded track
  • Do not burden your decision making with
    technology-management or get possessive about the
    cool toy allocate the GPS and its tasks to team
    members

11
Field Use Exercises
  • These may be performed anywhere there is suitable
    room and a GPS signal
  • Ex Refer to GPS to confirm pacecount it may be
    useful to allocate the 2nd man in line the GPS
    for this reason
  • Ex Use the track recording function to assure a
    good box-search in difficult terrain fill in
    gaps in the search so far
  • Ex Set a deliberate waypoint (e.g. patrol base)
    use GPS functions to find distance/heading back
    to the base, then return using compass/pacecount
  • Ex Set a hasty waypoint while on the march, such
    as a road intersection or observed enemy position
  • Ex Confirm the actual location of a feature (as
    of the patrol base above) using all data sources
    (map, gps, terrain). Decide how to discard bad
    data if they do not all agree

12
Post-mission
  • After the mission, do essentially the reverse of
    the pre-mission planning
  • Do this as quickly as practical, so your memory
    can fill in gaps in notes, and while the
    information is still relevant
  • Plug the GPS into the PC, and upload the units
    stored data into the computer
  • Upload new waypoints you may have entered while
    in the field if short (or no) labels were
    allocated, refer to your paper notes to give them
    more useful labels for the future
  • Upload track information to see the path you
    actually moved along compare this to your
    planned path and determine why it varied
  • Compare this information to other notes and
    information obtained by other navigational
    techniques. Attempt to determine where you
    actually went and where you actually found points
    of interest. Even if you will not be travelling
    in this area again, someone else might more
    information is always useful
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